BA Joint Honours English and Spanish (UCAS Code: QR34)
For entrance requirements
E: admissions@qub.ac.uk
T: +44 (0)28 9097 3838
For course information
Dr Eamonn Hughes
School of English
T: +44 (0)28 9097 3320
E: english@qub.ac.uk
W: http://www.qub.ac.uk/english
BA Single Honours
English 3 yrs (Q300)
BA Joint Honours
Drama and English 3 yrs (WQ43)
English and Film Studies 3 yrs (QW36)
English and French 4 yrs (QR31)
English and History 3 yrs (QV31)
English and Irish 3 yrs (QQ53)
English and Linguistics 3 yrs (QQ31)
English and Philosophy 3 yrs (QV35)
English and Politics 3 yrs (QL32)
English and Social Anthropology 3 yrs (QL36)
English and Sociology 3 yrs (QL33)
English and Spanish 4 yrs (QR34)
Theology and English 3 yrs (QV36)
Entrance Requirements
A-level: ABB including A-level English for Single Honours and Joint Honours with History, Linguistics and Politics. BBB including A-level English for other options.
Note: AS-level English (grade A) would be acceptable in lieu of A-level English.
Irish Leaving Certificate: B2B2B2B2B2B2/AB2B2B2B2 including Higher Level grade B2 in English for Single Honours and Joint Honours with History, Linguistics and Politics.
B2B2B2B2CC/B2B2B2B2B2 including Higher Level grade B2 in English for other options.
All applicants
If you plan to study English as a Joint Honours degree you should refer to the subject requirements for the other course.
For students whose first language is not English
An IELTS score of 6.5 with a minimum of 5.5 in each test component or an equivalent acceptable qualification, details of which are available at: http://go.qub.ac.uk/EnglishLanguageReqs
If you are an international student and you do not meet the English Language requirements, you should consider a preparation course at INTO Queen's University Belfast, which will develop the language skills you need to progress. INTO Queen's University Belfast is based on the University campus and offers a range of courses. For a full list click here
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English Studies at Queen's brings together a variety of specialist approaches under a single subject heading.
Our literature modules encourage students to look at a writer's works in the context of the historical period, the cultural background, and the literary genres to which these works belong. They also introduce students to critical theories such as feminism, structuralism and post-structuralism, which are now a significant part of literary studies.
Our language modules (also available on the Linguistics pathway) encompass the study of language structure and function, including the day-to-day use of the language and the major influences which have shaped it over the last millennium and a half.
Stage 1
There are six English modules in Stage 1, including English Language and Creative Writing. Joint Honours students take three English modules, whilst Single Honours students take six English modules.
Stage 2
In the second year, students choose from modules in:
18th-Century and Romantic Literature
Discovering the Earliest Writings in English
History of English: Studying Language Change
Introduction to American Writing
Introduction to Renaissance Literature
Irish Literature
Late Medieval Literature
Literature and Society 1850-1930
The English Language: Language and Power
The English Language: Patterns of Spoken English
Stage 3
In the third year, students have a choice from a range of specialist modules:
19th-Century Irish Writing
American Fiction 1945-1960
Chaucer's London Poetics
Comic Fiction: Fielding to Austen, 1740-1820
Contemporary Indian Literature in English
Contemporary US Crime Fiction
Corpus Linguistics
Critical Fictions
Critical History: Reading the Classics of Literary Criticism
Irish Fiction in the 20th Century
Language and Narrative Style
Language in the Media
Literature and Science in the 19th Century
Marvels, Monsters and Miracles in Anglo-Saxon England
Premodern Cultures of Performance
Reading Contemporary Irish and British Poetry
Shakespeare on Screen
Shakespearean Genres
Speech Worlds
Televising the Victorians
The Mock Epic in the Long 18th Century
Women's Writing 1660-1820
Dissertation on an English Language topic
Dissertation on an English Literature topic
English Studies at Queen's represents one of the most diverse areas of study and research in the Humanities, one that already has a worldwide reputation in some of its specialist fields of interest.
The Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry, under the auspices of the School of English, is the first Centre of Excellence for poetry in Ireland and its director is the internationally renowned poet Ciaran Carson. It provides resources for emerging and established poets, researchers and critics, and serves to link creativity to criticism and academic scholarship. The Centre ensures that the dynamic tradition of poetry at Queen's extends to a wide audience and is of benefit to students, writers, and the community.
Last updated 11.09.13